Monthly Newsletter PublicationMarch 2006



























OUR GLOBAL OUTREACH MAILING LIST

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McClain Ministries

1050 Ridgeside Drive

Brandon, MS39042

DO YOU BLOG?

As you know we arelaunching a "Blog" on the Internet in April. Many of you have asked, "what in the world" is a 'Blog.' It is similar to a Website.But you get to participate in theaction. Blogs are totally interactive and a feature that I think you will come to love. Yes indeed, we are a 'Virtual' ministry alive and well in the 21st century. Lena Williams, who has conducted the ministry's research on the subject of blogs, provides these wonder-fuldetails:

A blog is like a public diary that anyone can read. You can write about virtually anything you want... for example:

  • Like photography? Tell everyone about the great pictures you just took
  • A stay at home mom or dad? Tell everyone what your day is like
  • Love pets? Tell everyone about your cat "Peaches," or even write a Blog for Peaches!

You can write as much or as little as you want, and as often or as rarely as you like. Not a good writer? Don't worry about it!... The whole point of a blog is that you are sharing your

thoughts, desires, hobbies, hopes, dreams, or whatever! Everyone is interesting and very different and blogs are a way for you to reach the world.

Blog (noun, verb)
A web based, interactive, public diary of ones thoughts.

Blog·stream (noun, adjective)
One's stream of consciousness expressed in a blog.
The common current of thought as related to blogs.

Technical Requirements

Windows 2000 or XP

Internet Explorer 5.5 or 6.x installed (but does not have to be the default browser)

50 MB available hard drive space

CORETTA SCOTT KING 1927-2006

After her husband’s assassination in 1968, instead of retreating with her young children into her grief, Coretta Scott King stepped out into the forefront to continue her husband’s legacy. She began this the day before his funeral, leading the sanitation worker’s march he had gone to Memphis to support. She continued to stand up for social justice for the rest of her life. Mrs. King was devoted to preserving Dr. King’s legacy by committing much of her energy and attention to developing and building the Atlanta-based Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change as a living memorial to her husband’s life and nonviolent philosophy.

Situated in the Freedom Hall Complex encircling Dr. King’s tomb, the KingCenter is part of a twenty-three acre national historic park which includes his birth home and which hosts over one million visitors a year. For the twenty-seven years between 1968- 1995, Mrs. King devoted her life to developing the KingCenter, the first institution built in honor of an African-American leader. As the Founding President, Chair, and Chief Operating Executive Officer, she dedicated herself to providing local, national and international programs that have trained tens of thousands of people in Dr. King’s nonviolence philosophy and methods. She guided the creation of the largest archives in the world of civil rights documents at the KingCenter. In 1995, she passed the torch of leadership to her son Dexter Scott King.

Mrs. King spearheaded the massive educational and lobbying campaign to establish Dr. King’s birthday as a national holiday. In 1984, at the request of Mrs. King, Congress established the Martin Luther King, Jr. Federal Holiday Commission to assure appropriate commemoration of Dr. King’s Birthday throughout the nation and world. Mrs. King was the commssion’s Chair for its duration. On the third Monday in January1986, the first officialnational holiday in honor of Dr. King was celebrated. The King holiday is now celebrated by all 50 states and by millions of people in over 100 countries. Coretta Scott King has carried the message of nonviolence and the dream of the “Beloved Community” throughout the world. She has led goodwill missions to Africa, Latin America, Europe, and Asia and has spoken at some of history’s most massive peace and justice rallies. She served as a Woman’s Strike for Peace delegate to the seventeen-nation disarmament conference in Geneva, Switzerland in 1962 and as an alternate U.S. Delegate to the United Nations during the Carter Administration. She is the first woman to deliver the class–day address at Harvard, and the first woman to preach at a statutory service at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London. Through her international speaking platform and leadership for nonviolent social change, Mrs. King carried her message of hope and healing across the nation and throughout the world.

An advocate of interracial movements for nonviolent social change, in 1974 Mrs. King co-founded a broad coalition of over 100 religious, labor, business, civil, and women rights organizations dedicated to a national policy of full employment and equal economic opportunity serving as co chair of both the National Committee for Full Employment and the Full Employment Action Council. In 1983, she brought together more than 800 human rights organizations to form the NewCoalition of Conscience, which sponsored the 20th Anniversary March on Washington, the largest demonstration in our nation’s capital up to that year.

In 1985, Mrs. King and two of her children were arrested at the South African Embassy in Washington, D. C. for protesting against apartheid. In 1987, she helped lead the Mobilization Against Fear and Intimidation in ForsythCountyGeorgia. In preparation for the Reagan-Gorbachev talks in 1988, she served as head of the U. S. delegation of Women for a Meaningful Summit in Athens, Greece; and, in 1990, as the U.S.S.R. was redefining itself, Mrs. King was co-convener of the Soviet-American Women’s Summit in Washington, D.C.

The recipient of more than 50 major awards and doctorates from over 40 colleges and universities, Mrs. King Authored My Life with Martin Luther King, Jr. and has written a syndicated newspaper column. She has co-founded and served on the boards of numerous social change organizations including the Black Leadership Forum, the National Black Coalition for Voter Participation and the Black Leadership Roundtable. Heads of state including Prime Ministers and Presidents have held dialogues with Mrs. King. Yet she has also led on picket lines with striking workers and mothers seeking welfare rights.

She has met with great spiritual leaders including Pope John Paul II, The Dalai Lama, Dorothy Day and Bishop Desmond Tutu. She witnessed the historic handshake between Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Chairman Yassir Arafat at the signing of the Middle East Peace Accords and stood along side Nelson Mandela when he claimed victory in South Africa’s first free elections. Mrs. King has traveled across our nation and world speaking out on behalf of racial and economic justice, religious freedom, dignity and human rights for women, children, people with disabilities, universal healthcare, educational opportunities, nuclear disarmament and environmental protection. She has lent her support to nonviolent freedom movements worldwide and has consulted with many world leaders, including Corezon Aquino, Kenneth Kaunda, and Thabo Mbeki. As one of the most influential women leaders, Coretta Scott King has tried to make ours a better world and, in the process, has make history.

McClain Ministries1050 Ridgeside Drive, Brandon, MS39042

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